Ralph McGehee
Date: 19 Feb 1996 11:58:48 -0500
Until outlawed in mid 70s CIA directly involved in assassination
attempts against Castro of Cuba, and Congolese leader Lumumba. CIA
also encouraged plots that resulted in assassination of Dominican
Republic President Trujillo, South Vietnamese president Ngo Dinh Diem
in 63 and Chilean Rene Schneider in 73. Most extensive assassination
op was Operation Phoenix conducted during latter part of VN war.
Twentieth Century Fund. (1992). The Need to Know: Covert Action and
American Democracy, 83.
Vietnam, 65-70 details re Vietnam. From 65-68 U.S. and Saigon intel
services maintained an active list of VC cadre marked for
assassination. Phoenix Program for 69 called for "neutralizing" 1800 a
month. About one third of VC targeted for arrest had been summarily
killed. Security committees established in provincial interrogation
centers to determine fate of VC suspects, outside of judicial
controls. Green Berets and navy SEALs most common recruits for Phoenix
Program. Green Beret detachment B-57 provided admin cover for other
intel units. One was project cherry, tasked to assassinate Cambodian
officials suspected of collaborating with NVNese, and kgb. Another was
project oak targeted against svnese suspected collaborators. They
controlled by special assistant for counterinsurgency and special
activities, which worked with CIA outside of general abrams control.
Stein. J. (1992). A Murder in Wartime, 360-1.
Vietnam, 66-73 Phoenix op from 1/68 thru 5/71, CORDS reported 20,857
VCI killed. Gvt of VN reported 40,994 from 8/68 thru mid 71. Per cord
statistics 12.4% Deaths could be attributed to Phoenix ops. Kenneth
osborn of program said Phoenix became a depersonalized murder program.
A dept of defense analyst thayer, found that 616 suspected VCI
targeted by Phoenix from 1/70 thru 3/71 were killed by Phoenix forces.
After war NVNese foreign minister Nguyen Co Thach said CIA's
assassination program slaughtered far more than the 21,000 officially
listed by the U.S. In some parts of south 95% of communist cadre
assassinated or compromised by Phoenix. Manning, R., (ed), (1988). War
in the Shadows: the Vietnam Experience, 72.
Vietnam, 68-72 Under Phoenix "security committees" in provincial
"interrogation centers" would determine fate suspected NLF. Counterspy
spring/summer 78, 8.
Vietnam, 69 Under Phoenix in July 69 "Vietnam information notes," a
state dept publication said target for 69 elimination of 1,800 VCI per
month. Frazier, H. (ed). (1978). Uncloaking the CIA, 97.
Vietnam, 73 According to Defense Dept official 26,369 South
Vietnamese civilians killed under Phoenix while op under direct U.S.
control (Jan 68 thru Aug 72 ). By same source, another 33,358
detained without trial. Colby in 73 admitted 20,587 deaths thru end
71 , 28,978 captured, and 17,717 "rallied" to Saigon gvt. Thus approx
30% targeted individuals killed. All Phoenix stats fail to reflect
U.S. Activity after "official" U.S. Control of op abandoned.
Counterspy spring/summer 75 8.
Vietnam, 75 Counter-spy magazine describes Phoenix Program as "the
most indiscriminate and massive program of political murder since the
nazi death camps of world war two." Counterspy spring/summer 75 6.
Vietnam, in 82 Ex-Phoenix operative reveals that sometimes orders
were given to kill U.S. military personnel who were considered
security risks. He suspects the orders came not from "division", but
from a higher authority such as the CIA or the ONI. Covert Action
Information Bulletin (now Covert Action Quarterly) summer 82 52.
Vietnam. Phoenix Program to neutralize VCI (tax collectors, supply
officers, political cadre, local military officials, etc). Plan to
send pru or police teams to get in practice, death the frequent result
of such ops, some times through assassinations pure and simple.
Powers, T. (1979).The Man Who Kept the Secret, 181.
Vietnam. Phoenix Program took over 20,000 lives, 65-72 U.S.
Congress,Church Committee Report. (1976) B 1 27.
Vietnam, July 71 Colby inserted chart to Representative Reid showing
that some 67,282 persons had been neutralized by Phoenix ops against
VC between 68-71 Of these 31 percent had been killed, 26% rallied,
and 43% captured or sentenced. Frazier, H. (ed). (1978). Uncloaking
the CI, 18.
Vietnam, 67-73 The Phoenix Program used the CIA's assassination
squads, the former counter terror teams later called the provincial
reconnaissance units (PRU). Technically they did not mark cadres for
assassinations but in practice the pru's anticipated resistance in
disputed areas and shot first. People taken prisoner were denounced in
Saigon-held areas, picked up at checkpoints or captured in combat and
later identified as VC. Sheehan, N. (1988). A Bright Shining Lie, 732.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program, late 60 early 70 took over 20,000
lives in Vietnam. U.S. Congress, Church Committee Report. (1976) B 1
27.
Vietnam. Phung Hoang aka Phoenix Program quotas for units set by komer
for all 242 districts. One result indiscriminate killing with every
body labeled VCI. Powers, T. (1979). The Man Who Kept the Secrets,
181-2.
Conflict, li.
Law professor at University of Washington, Seattle, Roy L. Prosterman,
designed the land reform program the U.S. Government promoted in the
Philippines, Vietnam, and El Salvador. In each place the program was
accompanied by a rural terror. In Vietnam the Phoenix Program killed
40,000 civilian between August 68 and mid-71; in Philippines, martial
law; in El Salvador, a state of siege. Covert Action Information
Bulletin (now Covert Action Quarterly) Winter 90 69
Consequences.
Vietnam, 67-70 Phoenix a fiasco, it unmanageable and encouraged
outrageous abuses. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 323.
Vietnam, 75 according to Frank Snepp's Decent Interval up to
thirty thousand special police, CIA and Phoenix related Vietnamese
employees were left behind. Saigon CIA station managed to pull out
only 537 of its 1900 Vietnamese including close to 1000 high-level
Vietnamese who had built close relationships with the agency over the
years. Covert Action Information Bulletin (now Covert Action
Quarterly) 6-7/79 4.
Vietnam, 68-72 CI Phoenix project run jointly CIA and U.S. Army
military intel. Counterspy 5/73 21.
Vietnam, 75 U.S. military provided approx 600 case officers to
supplement 40-50 CIA case officers for Phoenix ops. Counterspy
spring/summer 75 8.
Vietnam. The Phoenix and the identity card programs. Volkman, E., &
Baggett, B. (1989). Secret Intelligence, 150.
Vietnam, 65-69 CI/pacification efforts initiated by French
culminate in Phoenix Program designed to eliminate Viet Cong
infrastructure. Made official June 68, Phoenix was intensification of
ci ops and involved "mass imprisonment, torture and assassination."
For thorough Phoenix description seeCountersp 5/73 20.
Vietnam, 66-73 Phoenix Program synthesis police and pm programs. CIA
managing census grievance, rd cadre, counterterror teams and pics.
Military intel working with mss, ARVN intel and regional and popular
forces. Aid managing chieu hoi and public safety, including field
police. Needed to bring altogether under special police. Valentine, D.
(1990). The Phoenix Program, 99.
Vietnam, 66 beginning of Phoenix Program. Lv 218. Phoenix to
increase identification VC infrastructure and passing info to
military, police, and other elements who were to induce defections,
capture them, or attack them in their strongholds. Colby, W. (1989).
Lost Victory, 266.
Vietnam, 67-73 In 67 CIA proposed all U.S. Intel agencies pool info
on VC at district, province and Saigon levels for exploitation.
Program first called intel coor and exploitation program (icex).
Phoenix the name of program. Assigned quotas for VC to be neutralized.
To focus police and intel orgs. Against communist apparatus. Blaufarb,
D.S. (1977). The Counterinsurgency Era, 243-8.
Vietnam, 67-73 District intel ops coor center (diooc). Dien ban
center a model for all of Phoenix. Bldg 10' x 40'. Manned by two U.S.
soldiers, 2 census grievance, one rd cadre, and one special branch.
Diooc intel clearinghouse to review, collate, and disseminate info.
Immediate local reaction. Americans kept files of sources, VCI and
order battle. Reaction forces 100 police, 1 PRU unit, guides from
census grievance. Marines screened civilian detainees using informants
and diooc's blacklist. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 126.
Vietnam, 67 12/20/67 Prime Minister signed directive 89-th. T/vp/m
legalizing Phung Hoang, VN clone of Phoenix. Valentine, D. (1990). The
Phoenix Program, 148.
Vietnam, 67 Phoenix Program in fledgling stage conceived and
implemented by CIA. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 147.
Vietnam, 68 Phoenix Program statistics were phony a bust and a fake.
DeForest, O., & Chanoff, D. (1990). Slow Burn, 54-55.
Vietnam, 69 Program of 69 campaign called for elimination of VCI.
Program became known as Phung Hoang or Phoenix. In each province the
chief established a province security committee (PSC). PSC controlled
the npff and sp who maintained province interrogation centers (pics).
Counterspy 5/73 20.
Vietnam, 71 CIA had no intention handling over attack on VCI to
national police command. CIA advisers to special police advised to
begin forming special intel force units (sifu). 8-Man teams composed
of 4 volunteers each from special police and field police. Sifu
targeted at high-level VCI, as substitutes for pru. They sign CIA
planned manage attack on VCI thru sb, while keeping Phoenix intact as
a way of deflecting attention. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix
Program, 391.
Vietnam, 71 In revising Phoenix Program (because of all communist
penetrations in gvt) first steps to hire southeast asia computer
associates (managed by a CIA officer) to advise 200-odd VNese techs to
take over MACV and CORDS computers. VNese were folded into big mack
and Phung Hoang management info system (phmis). Valentine, D. (1990).
The Phoenix Program, 363.
Vietnam, 72 In report on Phoenix effectiveness in 9/72 Phung Hoang
crossed out and anti-terrorist inserted. The end of Phoenix? Some
Phoenix ops in 73. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program 403,
406.
Vietnam, 75 U.S. Still involved in Phoenix in 75. Program renamed
special police investigative service (spis). U.S. provides data
processing facilities for spis thru, Computer Science Services, inc.
Which runs intel thru machines to classify and collate them and then
turns info over to spis. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program,
415.
Vietnam. Phoenix Program, resources control program, checkpoints,
identification card program, paramilitary police called the police
field force a 100 man mobile company at least one assigned to each
province. Aid helped upgrade police and developed national police
academy, improved communications and files, established one two-way
radio in every village. Chieu hoi program. Refugee generation
programs. Province coordinating committees supervised civic action on
bridges, roads, public buildings, agricultural extension work, medical
technicians and more. Blaufarb, D.S. (1977). The Counterinsurgency
Era, 217-8.
Vietnam, 67-73 The Phoenix Program used the CIA's assassination
squads, the former counter terror teams later called the provincial
reconnaissance units (PRU). Technically they did not mark cadres for
assassinations but in practice the PRU's anticipated resistance in
disputed areas and shot first. People taken prisoner were denounced in
Saigon-held areas, picked up at checkpoints or captured in combat and
later identified as VC. Sheehan, N. (1988). A Bright Shining Lie, 732.
Vietnam, Phoenix. Ranelagh, J. (1986). The Agency 437-441.
Vietnam, police. Public safety included Michigan State University
program. Resources control, effort to regulate movement resources both
human and material. Includes set up checkpoints roads and waterways,
mobile checkpoints. Resulted in 560,000 arrests by 1969. National
identity registration program. Every VNese 15 or older must register
and carry identification card. Fingerprints obtained. Once completed
program to include fingerprints, photos and bio data. Surveillance of
suspects role of special police branch. Sp agents penetrate subversive
organizations and use intel collection, political data and files from
census data to separate good from bad. Pacification or Phoenix
Program. Systematic effort at intel collection and exploitation. All
intel services and America's CIA and military intel orgs. Pool data
from informers and prisoners. With this info police and provincial
reconnaissance units make raids in contested areas to seize or
eliminate VCI agents. See Klare, M.T. (1972). War Without End, 265 for
more death squads.
Vietnam, 66-71 Phoenix op designed to help U.S. Military reach
crossover point, where dead and wounded exceeded VC's ability to field
replacements. In 4/67 Pres Johnson announced formation of civil ops
and revolutionary development support (CORDS) for pacification. R.
Komer as deputy commander of MACV-CORDS. CORDS budget about $4 billion
from 68-71. CORDS the management structure for pacification programs.
Personnel both military and civilian. By 71, 3000 servicemen, advisers
to ARVN, placed under CORDS. 1200 Civilians by 71. Usaid responsible
for material aid. State and USIA also provided personnel. But CIA
played the crucial role. CORDS reinstated civic action teams under
name revolutionary development cadre. Rd program formed teams of 59
SVNese, divided into 3 11-man security squads and 25 civic action
cadres. Teams to spend 6 months in a village to fulfill "eleven
criteria and 98 works for pacification." 1. Annihilation of ...Cadre;
2. Annihilation of wicked village dignitaries; etc. System placed
40,000 two-way radios in villages. Land reform failed. (Photos of
Phoenix propaganda material). Teams helped create regional and popular
forces (rf/pfs). Ruff-puffs, suffered high casualties. They
represented half of SVN gvt forces, they had 55-66% of casualties.
They inflicted 30% of communist casualties. Underground pm effort
called Phoenix which included a "census grievance," stay-behind. He
actually a spy. All info fed into intel coordination and exploitation
program. VNese at Komer's request set up staff that with CIA was
responsible for coordinating intel reports on VC infrastructure. Info
from census grievance, military, police reports. PM units - including
CIA's provincial reconnaissance units and ruff-puffs. Arrestees -
those not killed when captured - taken to provincial interrogation
centers (pic). Also regional prisons and a national center all
financed by CIA. Problems of coordination and jealousy. Numerical
quotas created saying how many VCI to be eliminated each month.
Torture used in questioning. Manning, R., (ed), (1988). War in the
Shadows: the Vietnam Experience, 55-65.
Vietnam, 71 William E. Colby on july 19, 1971, before Senate
subcommittee testified CIA op Phoenix had killed 21,587 Vietnamese
citizens between 1/68 and 5/71. In response to a question from mr.
Reid "do you state categorically that Phoenix has never perpetrated
the premeditated killing of a civilian in a non-combat situation?"
Colby replied: "No, I could not say that...I certainly would not say
never." Counterspy 12/78 6.
Vietnam, 67 First MACV alloted Phoenix 126 officers and ncos. By end
67 one nco assigned to each of 103 dioccs then in existence. All
military officers and enlisted men assigned to Phoenix Program took
orders from CIA. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 145.
Vietnam, 68-73 Phoenix ci/terror op funded and covered by U.S. Aid,
CORDS pacification survey, public employment projects, and other
benign agencies. Counterspy may 73 22.
Vietnam, 71 1.7 Billion dollars go to CORDS in Phoenix Project.
Colby refuses congressional audit Phoenix funds before committee.
Counterspy 5/73 24.
Vietnam, 71 When questioned concerning unaccounted-for 1.7 Billion
dollars which had financed much of covert aspect of Phoenix Program,
Ambassador Colby assured house subcommittee on foreign ops and govt
info, all main problems has been resolved and Congress could rest
assured aberrations of brutality would remain at a minimum. He did not
know how many innocent victims the program had killed, maybe 5,000,
maybe more. He did not have authority to discuss reasons why Congress
could not audit 1.7 billions worth of taxpayers funds which went to
CORDS. Counterspy 5/73 24.
Vietnam, 69 Colby rendered due process obsolete. VCI target broken
into three classes a, for leaders and party members; b, for holders of
responsible jobs; c, for rank-and file. Decision c category to be
ignored since Phoenix directed at VCI command and control structure.
Hamlet Evaluation System (HES) explained. Hes guesstimate of VCI in
1/69 was 75,000. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 260.
Vietnam, 71 House subcommittee on foreign operations and gvt. Info.
investigates Phoenix. Colby insists project "respectable", brutality
minimized. Estimates 5000 killed. Congress denied audit of Phoenix
funds. Counterspy may 73 24.
Vietnam, 67-73 CIA developed Phoenix Program in 67 to neutralize:
kill, capture or make defect VCI. VCI means civilians suspected of
supporting communists. Targeted civilians not soldiers. Phoenix also
called Phung Hoang by VNese. Due process totally nonexistent. SVNese
who appeared on black lists could be tortured, detained for 2 years
without trial or killed. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program,
13.
Vietnam, 68 Phoenix ci/terror program established by Thieu's
presidential decree, literally written by CIA man William Colby.
Decree and future authorizations indicated that suspects could be
arrested without a warrant or copy of charges and detained on basis of
police dossier heresay evidence. Once arrested, suspect could not
confront accusers or see dossier, was denied bail legal counsel, and
was denied a trial or even a hearing. At best one's case was reviewed
by province security committee composed of milt and intel officers.
Under Phoenix all rights of due process stripped. Counterspy Winter 78
28.
Covert Action Information Bulletin 13:3, 16-17:6-10; 17:48-49; 22:2,4,6,10-24; "from Phoenix
associates to civilian-military assistance," 22:18-19; "from the
hessians to the contras: mercenaries in the service of imperialism,"
22:10-11.
89 An article by Rob Rosenbaum from interviews with General Secord
and Ted "Blond Ghost" Shackley. They give their answers to questions
about Iran-Contra, secret war in Laos, Phoenix Program in Vietnam,
CIA-Mafia plots of the sixties. Shackley discusses charges of opium
smuggling in Laos by elements supported by CIA. Photos of Secord and
Shackley. Shackley interview in his risk-assessment consulting firm,
Rosslyn-based Research Associates International. Vanity fair, 1/90
72-77, 126-8,130-1 Vietnam 68-73 Evan Parker, Jr., John Mason, and
John Tilton all from CIA were men who headed Phoenix Program when it
supposedly transferred to military and CORDS. Roger McCarthy said CIA
very much involved with Phoenix. Corn, D. (1994). Blond Ghost: Ted
Shackley and the CIA's Crusades, 193.
Vietnam. John Murray, of WHD, and his wife Delores, former CIA ops
officer, sending letters of disclosures re Shackley. He covertly
contacted William Miller, staff director of Church Committee, and told
how Shackley and Helms in 70 arranged to keep CIA from being
implicated in My Lai massacres. (Some evidence suggested massacre
related to CIA's Phoenix Program.) Corn, D. (1994). Blond Ghost: Ted
Shackley and the CIA's Crusades, 302.
Vietnam, 67 50 officers and enlisted men invited to join counter
insurgency program. Those who accepted by CIA joined as junior officer
trainees. Most assigned to provinces as rdc/p or rdc/o advisers and
many as Phoenix coordinators. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix
Program, 198.
Vietnam, 68-69 Robert K. Brown (later editor of Soldier of Fortune
magazine) worked with James K. Damron, CIA's project coordinator for
the Phoenix Program in Gia Dinh province. Pigeon, R. (1986). The
Soldier of Fortune, 44.
Vietnam, Orrin DeForest, with U.S. Air Force special investigations
early on. Joined CIA in 68 as chief interrogator Hau Nghia province in
bien hoa under cover of Office of Special Assistance (OSA). Duties
included inspection of pics, training VNese in interrogation.
Monitoring intel production. He discovered pics poorly run, Phoenix
Program slipshod, and CIA had been unable generate single agent. Using
methods learned while working with Japanese national police in
identifying, communist agents, disregarding CIA methods, DeForest's
efforts produced 80% hard intel in VN. Minnick, W. (1992). Spies and
Provacateurs, 50-1.
training, 55 Eisenhower establishes public safety program whose goal
is to train foreign police units in, among other things,
counterinsurgency. 62 Program becomes Office of Public Safety which
eventually procures 400 officers in 45 countries and yearly budget 50
million. Much of Phoenix funding and training was thru Office of
Public Safety. By 75 ops had distributed 200 million in equipment
foreign police, trained 7000+ senior police officials, and trained
over 1 million rank and file police officers worldwide. Counterspy
Winter 78 29-30.
Vietnam, 75 Counter-spy magazine describes Phoenix Program as "the
most indiscriminate and massive program of political murder since the
nazi death camps of world war two." Counterspy Spring/Summer 75 6.
Vietnam. Former Phoenix advisor Wayne Cooper said "Operation Phoenix
was a unilateral American program", and Klare confirmed by saying
"although most of the dirty work was performed by indigenous
operatives, Phoenix was designed, organized, financed, and
administered by U.S. authorities." Counterspy Winter 78 27.
Vietnam. "Phoenix demonstrated that the U.S. Government through the
CIA will create, impose, and conduct an operation in another country
without a semblance of a mandate from a given people or their
representatives as long as the operation is considered in interest of
U.S. governmental objectives." Counterspy Winter 78 27-8.
Vietnam, 59-69 the SEALs and the Phoenix Program. The Intel
Coordination and Exploitation Program (ICEX) was a joint MACV/CIA op -
forerunner of Phoenix. SEALs helped train VNese personnel. SEALs
assigned ops detachments. SEALs worked with PRUs. By 68, with prisoner
snatches, ambushes, and increasing VC defections, ICEX program
neutralizing 800 VCI every month. Phoenix began 7/1/68. Description of
the province intel ops coordinating center (piocc) and the district
(diocc). Combatting VCI in urban areas responsibility of national
police force and police field force. SEALs taught PRUsin mekong delta.
Description of prus. They the most effective native troops. By end of
68, the iv corps PRUswere almost entirely advised by seal personnel.
Seal advisors accompanied PRUson average of 15 missions a month.
Description of ops. Dockery, K. (1991). SEALs in Action, 167-176.
Vietnam, 68-73 ttwo small groups wreaked havoc on the VCI. The
Provincial Reconnaissance Units (PRU) and the Navy's SEALs. PRUs and
SEALs often worked together and both killed many VCI and guerrillas --
the enemy had wrapped itself in the population. Together they were
fewer than 6000 men. They had access to the best intel often coming
directly from CIA. Pru had roots in the counterterror teams of the
early 60s. In 66 the ct became prus. Details of the makeup and
recruiting source of the prus. PRUsoften killed targets. Military
participation in the pru program was to end in 10/70. Pru was the most
effective action arm of the Phoenix Program. Details of the SEALs
larger-than-life reputation earned in VN. Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes to
Ashes, 171-199.
Vietnam, 65-72 During Nixon's first 2 1/2 years, state department
officially admits that the CIA-run Phoenix Program murdered or
abducted 35,708 VNese civilians, 4,836 more than the pentagon claimed
the NLF had assassinated or kidnapped during the same period, and a
monthly increase over the 200 killed by the CIA every month under
johnson. Senator Gravel edition, (1971). Pentagon Papers v 300.
Vietnam, 65-73 Phoenix Program torture tactics include rape,
electric shock, water torture, hanging from ceiling, beatings,
incarceration and execution. Counterspy 5/73 16.
Vietnam, 69-71 K. Barton Osborn, Phoenix agent, testified to
Congress "I never knew an individual to be detained as a VC suspect
who ever lived through an interrogation in a year and a half. Uc 114.
Note says this testimony given before U.S. Congress, Heari.
315-321.
Vietnam, 73 "The prime difference between the types of intelligence
provided to the military units and the Phoenix coordinator was that
all information going to Phoenix was of a political nature ... I was
following through on a reported (VC) suspect that one of my agents had
identified. The man was interrogated at the marine
counter-intelligence complex and I was invited to witness it. As I
entered the hooch the man was being taken out, dead. He died from a
six inch dowel pushed through his ear and into his brain." Barton
Osborn, former Phoenix case officer before Armed Services Committee,
1973. Counterspy Spring/Summer 75 7.
Vietnam. Colby supervised est of pics in each of SVN's 44 provinces.
Each center constructed with CIA funds. Agency personnel directed each
centers op much of which consisted of torture carried out by VN
nationals. Coi 207. Colby admitted serious abuses committed under
Phoenix. Former intel officers came before Congressional cmttees to
describe repeated examples torture. Marchetti, V., & Marks, J.D.
(1974). The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence 207 see fn.
Vietnam, 66-74 CIA analyst, Nelson H. Brickman, on 11/66 produced
basic guidelines for [the Phoenix Program] in a memorandum that
described the VCI and suggested which parts of it should be targeted.
His memo said rank-and-file members were not legitimate targets
"because they were most often unwilling participants in the
revolution." Brickman called for using all available intelligence
services to neutralize the VCI. Robert Komer was so impressed he
assigned Brickman to the revolutionary development office. He adopted
brickman's suggestion that there was no need to begin a new anti-vci
program, only that the existing programs be brought together and
managed by a single bureau. He recommended the U.S. Agencies get their
houses in order before bringing in the gvn. Brickman "deserved the
credit" for the Phoenix Program. A program called intel coordination
and exploitation (icex) was the first structure. Evan parker named
director of icex but komer had full control. U.S. Military reluctantly
participated initially. Icex officially created on 7/9/67, although
basic structure had been in place a year. Building of district ops and
coordinating centers (doicc) which by late 67 were called district
intel and ops coordinating centers (dioccs). MACV directive 381-41
stated: "to coordinate and give impetus to U.S. and gvn
operations...Directed toward elimination of the VC infrastructure."
Icex placed under cords. South Vietnamese were unwilling to take
program seriously. Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes to Ashes, 58-70.
Vietnam, 67-72 K. Barton Osborn's testimony re the Phoenix Program
before the house committee on government ops, 8/71. Osborn
characterized program as a "sterile, depersonalized murder program."
Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes to Ashes, xv-xvi.
Vietnam, 67 The Phoenix (Phung Hoang) program was officially born on
12/20/67 when the SVNese premier issued a decree. This differed from
ICEX only in official SVNese support for the program. Seal-and-search
op in Bui Cui village. LRRP ambush parties. People's self-defense
forces (psdf) started after Tet, it was a nationwide system of local
militias. Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes to Ashes, 72-81.
Vietnam, 68-70 PIOCCC had extensive dossiers on VCI and the chieu
hoi program was the largest producer of Phoenix intel. 132. A
criticism of Phoenix was the covert control by CIA. Despite influx of
military advisers, CIA controlled chain of command and purse strings.
Colby, top man of CORDS in 69 had been with CIA. American directors of
Phoenix at national level were all CIA. In 7/69 the system changed.
"Management and support facilities for Phoenix were officially
transferred from the office of the special assistant to the ambassador
(osa) (cia) to MACV, who assumed full responsibility for providing for
or arranging monetary and logistical support through American
channels." From July 69 on, CIA made up only a small part of the
program. Details of numbers neutralized and differences between CIA
and military estimates. The use of diocc VCI target folders, a simple
prepared set of biographical, operational, and administrative
questions. By the end of 1970 one hundred thousand copies had been
distributed. A sophisticated computerized collation program called the
Phung Hoang Management Info System (PHMIS) was implemented. The
program combined the national police tracking system with VCI info to
gear up police for handling both. PHMIS was manned by Vietnamese,
using American advisers as trainers. 135-6. Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes
to Ashes, 134.
Vietnam, 68 President Thieu with the help of William Colby, Komer's
deputy for CORDS, drafted a decree that officially sanctioned
Phoenix/Phung Hoang on 7/1/68. Article 3 was of paramount importance
-- it defined who was or was not a member of the VCI. Article 3 --
definitions: the Viet Cong infrastructure is all Viet cong, political
and administrative organizations established by the communist party
which goes under the name people's revolutionary party, from the
cities to the countryside. The Central Office of South Vietnam (COSVN)
is the highest level steering organization...And the front for the
liberation of South Vietnam (NLFSVN)....Viet Cong military units,
members of mass organizations established by the Viet Cong, citizens
forced to perform as laborers, or civilians in areas temporarily
controlled by the Viet cong, are not classified as belonging to the
Viet Cong infrastructure. Definition adjusted over time. Andrade, D.
(1990). Ashes to Ashes, 84.
Vietnam, 94 VN rejects visit of ex-CIA chief Colby, now a Washington
lawyer, who had planned to visit as a director of a U.S.-based
investment fund. Fund directors had planned to hold a reception
Monday. Event canceled, and directors will meet in Bangkok. Colby was
CIA's chief in Saigon during war and was associated with Phoenix, an
op to root out rural support for communist guerrillas via sweeping
arrests, torture and execution of suspects. Critics said most of those
killed were innocent peasants. Chicago Tribune 12/3/94 21.
Vietnam, accelerated pacification campaign, July 68 Thieu with
Colby's help issued decree est Phoenix committees at national,
regional and provincial and even district level, "to which all the
agencies involved had to furnish representation." Colby, W. (1978).
Honorable Men, 267.
Vietnam, Australia, Vietnam, 62-73 Australian AATTV teams operated
in VN often in CIA Phoenix op. `Black team' commanded by American of
australian usually given target figure. He pinpointed and black team
would go out, usually dressed in enemy's gear and the assassination
then blamed on VC. Toohey, B., & Pinwill, W. (1990). Oyster: The Story
of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service 87-88.
Vietnam, icex intel coor and exploitation MACV/cia program to work on
VCI with Vietnamese cooperation. Colby helped devise program which
became Phoenix. Colby, W. (1978).Honorable Men 267.
Vietnam, National Security study memo, 67-69 said although Phoenix
launched in Dec 67, Vietnamese cooperation minimal and only after
American prodding, Thieu issued a decree in July 68 directing network
to be set up. Program forced on VNese. Pru supervised, controlled and
financed by Americans. Frazier, H. (ed). (1978). Uncloaking the CIA,
111-125.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program most notorious of counterinsurgency programs.
Originated by robert w. Komer, who now headed Civilian Operations
Revolutionary Development Staff (CORDS), Phoenix designed to root out
secret Vietcong infrastructure in South Vietnam. Miller, N. (1989).
Spying for America379.
Vietnam, Phoenix, 68-70 In 69 CIA apparently had attack
squeamishness and pulled out of CORDS. Concluded Phoenix
inappropriate. It believed North had moved away from military
engagement to lacing entire gvt with spies -- possibly as many as
30,000 so Thieu's gvt could be easily overthrown. Baritz, L. (1985).
Backfire, 269.
Vietnam, Phoenix op. Every person who ran program from Saigon assigned
to program from CIA. Colby and 20,000 + figure of persons killed under
Phoenix, see fn ag 440. Phoenix General Ranelagh, J. (1986).The
Agency 436-441.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program, beginning circa 66-67 CORDS pacification
program. Komer settled on massive intel program on VC who could be
neutralized by SVN forces. First called ICEX. Name changed to Phoenix
in 69 with SVN version phung hoang. Had interrogation centers in each
of SVNs 235 districts and 44 provinces, card files and computerized
indexes. Pru's of 50 to 100 men. In Phoenix CIA provided weapons, paid
for Saigon computer files, funded and trained PRU's and passed intel
to Phoenix. Colby told senate Phoenix killed 20,587 VCI. When
questions arose re legality Colby retreated and said 87% killed in
regular military actions. Two army lts. Told federal judge they order
to maintain kill quota 50 VCI a month. Prados, J. (1986). Presidents'
Secret Wars, 307-310.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program evaluation. Robert Komer wrote Phung Hoang
has been a small, poorly managed, and largely ineffective effort.
Clearly Phoenix failed to eliminate the infrastructure that remained
after heavy losses of tet. Ce 274-8. Colby continued to see Phoenix as
contributing usefully to attack on VC. Blaufarb, D.S. (1977). The
Counterinsurgency Era, notes 328.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program, july 69 "Vietnam information notes" a
State Dept publication says: target for 1969 calls for elimination of
1,800 VCI per month. Frazier, H. (ed). (1978). Uncloaking the CIA, 97.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program. Part of total pacification program of gvt
VN. Colby testified that in over two and a half years there were
29,000 captured, 17,000 defected and 20,500 killed, of which 87% were
killed by regular and paramilitary forces and 12% by police and
similar elements. Vast majority killed in military combat, fire
fights, or ambushes, and most of remainder were killed in police
actions attempting to capture them. Major stress to encourage capture.
Borosage, R.L., & Marks, J. (eds.). (1976). The CIA File, 190.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program. Quotas and indiscriminate killing of people.
CIA conceived and organized program and regional and provincial
officers in charge were all CIA. Colby actually wrote Phoenix
directive which Thieu was finally pressured into adopting july 68
Colby conceded Phoenix recorded deaths of 20,587. Powers, T. (1979).
The Man Who Kept the Secrets, 181-2.
Vietnam, Phoenix Program, 67-75 Targets members VCI. 637 Military
intel advisers assigned to Phoenix. Much money given to VNese police
to expand detention facilities. Phoenix org: first the district co -
ordination center, diocc, that maintained dossiers on suspected VC.
Once enough evidence person placed on police green list. Suspect then
jailed without right to civilian trail. In cordon and search ops all
villagers lined up and walk past police checkpoint. Next level
province interrogation center, pic, staffed by SVNese, Americans and
CIA. After interrogation, suspect passed on to province security
committee, comprised of police chiefs, military and police intel and
advisors. Finally suspects could be imprisoned under law for 2 years.
This one way to neutralize. Other way via Provincial Reconnaissance
Units, PRUs, who would kidnap or assassinate agents targeted by diocc.
Had American advisors from SEALs, Green Berets. Official amnesty
program called chieu hoi used to convince VC to surrender. VC
categorized as a,b, or c. A were key members, c least impt. National
police detention center processed 180,000 a year. American money and
effort went into national identification card, id, project. All
Vietnamese over age 15 jailed if did not carry a card a RAND computer
tracked the 15 million suspects also cross-linked to 10 million
dossiers and fingerprints. The Dossier issue 6, 11/83 14-5.
Vietnam, Phoenix, 72-73 The F-6 program was a defensive measure to
bolster Phung Hoang after the Easter Offensive. F-6 sought to increase
pressure on the VCI by allowing province chiefs to move against
suspected cadre on the strength of a single report rather then the
usual three. With the culmination of the F-6 program in early 73, the
Phoenix Program came to an end. In the spring of 72 phung hoang was
absorbed into the national police. The last American advisers left VN
in december 72. Various tables, command structure charts in appendix.
Andrade, D. (1990). Ashes to Ashes, 231-251.
Vietnam, 66-73 Phoenix Program synthesis police and pm programs. CIA
man managing census grievance, rd cadre, counterterror teams and pics.
Military intel working with mss, arvn intel and regional and popular
forces. Aid managing chieu hoi and public safety, including field
police. Needed to bring altogether under special police. Valentine, D.
(1990). The Phoenix Program, 99.
Vietnam, 67-73 CIA developed Phoenix Program in 67 to neutralize:
kill, capture or make defect VCI. VCI means civilians suspected of
supporting communists. Targeted civilians not soldiers. Phoenix also
called phung hoang by VNese. Due process totally nonexistent. SVNese
who appeared on black lists could be tortured, detained for 2 years
without trial or killed. Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program,
13.
Vietnam, 68-72 NLF according to Nixon adm decimated during Tet
Offensive, remainder by Phoenix Program. Nvese officer reported
Phoenix resulted in loss of thousands of our cadres. Proof in 2
remaining offensives. In 72 and in 75 they did not rely on guerrillas.
Baritz, L. (1985). Backfire, 273.
Vietnam, 68 Phoenix Program quota of 1800 neutralizations per month.
Viet Cong Infrastructure system (vciis) fed 3000 names VCI into
computer at combined intel center political order battle section.
Beginning of computerized blacklist. In Saigon DIA, FBI and CIA used
computers. Until 70 computerized blacklist a unilateral American op.
Valentine, D. (1990). The Phoenix Program, 259.
BACK to Grover Furr's Vietnam War Page.